577
577
Oct 1, 2012
10/12
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KPIX
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energy is being produced to power our lives. while energy development comes with some risk, north america's natural gas producers are committed to safely and responsibly providing generations of cleaner-burning energy for our country, drilling thousands of feet below fresh water sources within self-contained well systems. and, using state-of-the-art monitoring technologies, rigorous practices help ensure our operations are safe and clean for our communities and the environment. we're america's natural gas. i mean we've been here for five hours and it only feels like four. it feels like four tops. this year, we're finally getting everything... ...that we didn't get last year. yeah. big screen! true 4g. yup. sfx: bing! hey, what did you just do? i just sent him a playlist. by touching phones? yup, simple as that. it's the galaxy s3. i'll see you at the studio later. later. when do you think we're going to be able to... do that thing? on the next one? vo: the next big thing is already here. the samsung galaxy s3. dove knows women w
energy is being produced to power our lives. while energy development comes with some risk, north america's natural gas producers are committed to safely and responsibly providing generations of cleaner-burning energy for our country, drilling thousands of feet below fresh water sources within self-contained well systems. and, using state-of-the-art monitoring technologies, rigorous practices help ensure our operations are safe and clean for our communities and the environment. we're america's...
101
101
Oct 3, 2012
10/12
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CNBC
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. >> solar energy. >> yes. >> you're doing research in solar energy? >> yes. where else is the solar energy the most intense? >> at the desert. >> the desert, of course. >> but won't that hurt your oil industry? >> no. no, no, not at all. it will supplement it. our vision is that we will be exporters of gigawatts of electricity. we will be exporting both: barrels of oil and gigawatts of power. >> and so, he says, the kingdom will still be in the energy business long after the sun sets on the age of oil. >> due to the great recession, oil prices had plummeted when these stories first aired in 2008 and 2009. they're back up again but have not reached the heights of $150 a barrel. as for the possibility of speculators driving prices up, new federal regulations now make it more difficult to manipulate the market. that's this edition of 60 minutes on cnbc.
. >> solar energy. >> yes. >> you're doing research in solar energy? >> yes. where else is the solar energy the most intense? >> at the desert. >> the desert, of course. >> but won't that hurt your oil industry? >> no. no, no, not at all. it will supplement it. our vision is that we will be exporters of gigawatts of electricity. we will be exporting both: barrels of oil and gigawatts of power. >> and so, he says, the kingdom will still be in...
179
179
Sep 26, 2012
09/12
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CNBC
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it's a game changer. ♪ it means cleaner, cheaper american-made energy. but we've got to be careful how we get it. design the wells to be safe. thousands of jobs. use the most advanced technology to protect our water. billions in the economy. at chevron, if we can't do it right, we won't do it at all. we've got to think long term. we've got to think long term. ♪ [ male announcer ] the exceedingly nimble, ridiculously agile, tight turning, fun to drive 2013 smart. ♪ >> this is a case of two guys who didn't set out to be spies, but it turned out that way, at least partly, because of money: one, a chinese-american businessman, the other, a pentagon analyst. the fbi discovered the analyst was planning to pass classified information to china and installed hidden cameras in their car. and as scott pelley reported in 2010, the two spies were caught red-handed. >> there's a nice thai restaurant out there. >> oh, okay. >> this is what espionage looks like. the man driving the car is gregg bergersen. he's a civilian analyst at the pentagon with one of the natio
it's a game changer. ♪ it means cleaner, cheaper american-made energy. but we've got to be careful how we get it. design the wells to be safe. thousands of jobs. use the most advanced technology to protect our water. billions in the economy. at chevron, if we can't do it right, we won't do it at all. we've got to think long term. we've got to think long term. ♪ [ male announcer ] the exceedingly nimble, ridiculously agile, tight turning, fun to drive 2013 smart. ♪ >> this is a case...
108
108
Sep 26, 2012
09/12
by
CNBC
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months before the virus was first detected, inspectors from the international atomic energy agency had begun to notice that iran was having serious problems with its centrifuges at natanz. >> what we know is that an iaea report said that 1,000 to 2,000 centrifuges were removed from natanz for unknown reasons. and we know that stuxnet targets 1,000 centrifuges. so from that, people are drawn to the conclusion, "well, stuxnet got in and succeeded." that's the only evidence that we have. >> the only information that's not classified. >> yes. >> and there are lots of things about stuxnet that are still top secret. who was behind it? >> what we do know is that this was a very large operation. you're really looking at a government agency from some country who is politically motivated and who has the insider information from a uranium enrichment facility that would facilitate building a threat like this. >> an intelligence agency, probably. >> probably. >> we know from reverse engineering the attack codes that the attackers have full-- and i mean this literally-- full tactical knowledge of ev
months before the virus was first detected, inspectors from the international atomic energy agency had begun to notice that iran was having serious problems with its centrifuges at natanz. >> what we know is that an iaea report said that 1,000 to 2,000 centrifuges were removed from natanz for unknown reasons. and we know that stuxnet targets 1,000 centrifuges. so from that, people are drawn to the conclusion, "well, stuxnet got in and succeeded." that's the only evidence that we...